Page:The Asheboro Courier, Volume IX, No. 26.pdf/4

 I

IT STANDS AT THE HEAD.

SAMSONS

07 EXTRAORDINARY STRENGTH.

MEN" AXTD WOMEZT

A

QPIHI3E3

MODERN

1S0ME

French Woman That Carried Weights That Were Equal o 2,016 Pounds Feat, ol Strong' Men. The feats of Lulu Hurst fall into

insig-

nificance beside those of Mme. Gobert, who laid claim to no other power than uncommon physical strength. This woman, who is described as possessing a remarkably beautiful face and form, appeared first before the public at St. Bartholomew fair in London, in 1818. Her achievements astonished all who beheld them. She carried weights equal to 2,016 pounds, lifted, a heavy table, on which several persons were seated, with her teeth, supported an anvil weighing 400 pounds on her chest while a blacksmith forged a horseshoe upon it, aad

This eut shows the New style of wood work that the company ia now Introducing.

afterward tied her long hair about the anvil and swung it about. The Georgia girl's-chai- r feat was a favorite one with Mme. Gobert, and it is noteworthy that in the case of each woman this was the first branch of their performances attacked by skepticism. Whether, as was charged, her public performances were made up largely of trickery, there to bo no doubt that she was extraordinarily strong. On one occasion while traveling, her coach sunk intojjjr: mire and resisted all efforts of "the horses. Descending, the female Samson easily extricated the vehicle and proceeded on her journey amid the applause of a large crowd of common people, with whom her popularity continued foi years.

In

1871, M. Gregorie, claiming to be years old, astonished the physicians and the public of a town near London by carrying 700 pounds with ease, lifting an ox, and performing other wonderful feats. His shoulders were prodigious, and his biceps almost seventy-on- e

- ARTISTICALLY

BEAUTIFUL

WITHOUT A Pi In its Mechanical construction it has no rival.

NEW

'iHE IViat

tlrem

OF ATTACHIVIEWTS

LSIME

a re noW being placed with each ''Domestic? are speciaUies. These ntfRchmeuts and the

USTErW".

No other machine has

WOODWORK

make the 'Doniesticmore everthsn" without question, the acknowledged standard of

lorSaleby

S. W. WHITE, Red Cross.. N. C. .Agents wanted in unoccupied territory. Mala street, Richmond, Va.

Address Domestic Sewing Machine Co., oc

THE HOME DOCTOR.

f

a. French physition announces tha; distressing or excessive palpitation of the heart can be arrested by bending double, the head down and the arms haneinj?, so as- to produce a temporary congestion of the upper portion of the body. In nearly every instance of nervous or anemic palpitation the heart resumes its natural function. If the movements of respiration are arrested during this action the effect is still more rapid.

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Asthma. The most popular remedies tor this disorder are those used by inhalation, and experience demonstrates them the most effective. The following formula has no superior: 8

,

8 4 4 4

Cubebs

Stramonium Nitrate of potash Cascarilla bark

16 12 1

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drachms

" " " " " "

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The ingredients should be in fine powder, and thoroughly dry before mixing. The composition Is used by burning from to one-hateaspoonful, and inhaling the smoke, w hich is most conveniently done by using .the cover of a tin box. Not only is the powder effective, but its price is reasonable, averaging about thirty-fiv- e cents per pound. one-four-

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Scientific American.

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Slilk Diet. Milk should enter largely into the diet of children. It contains caseine, or flesh' forming material, cream and sugar, which are heat producers; mineral salts,, for the bony structure ; and water as a solvent for all the other materials necessary in nutrition. It should be used with

discretion, however; not drunk immoderately, but tiken Flowly as food, after the pattern given by nature. Milk as is a fluid, but as soon as it meets the acid of the gastric juice, it is changed to a soft, curdy, cheese-lik- e substance, and then must be digested, and the stomach is overtasked if too much be taken at once. A large glass of miik swallowed suddenly will form in the stomach a lump of dense, cheesy curds, which mav even prove fatal to a weak stomach. Under the action of the stomach this cheesy mass will turn over and over like a heavy weight, and, as the gastric juice can only attack its surface, it digests very slowly. But this same milk, taken slowly, or with dry toast, light rolls, or soft, dry porridge, forms a porous ltmij through which the g;istric juice can pass, and which breaks up every tir the stomach turns it over. Milk shoul'i be slightly salted, and eaten within-.- - u stuffs or sipped by the spoonful, t produces less heat than human vvVa : a child would grow thin upon it lines- - a little sugar were added. Wheat flour has such an excess of material as wou'd fatten a child r.ndulv. and should have cow's milk added io it. to reduce its fattening r.owcr.

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Bob Burdette.

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.

L'h'tUi-ddphi-

Thv

on of an American ,

alth'iu:i i)rn abioid.



minister c. i

eligible

to the Presidency of the United States

is made from chicle, a gum which exudes from a Mexican tree, the fruit of which is called sanodilia. The fruit is about the size of an apple and as delicious in flavor. The gum is collected by tapping the trees runs out freely, is molded in the sand into cukes. hardening in the sun, and is brought to the market on each mu e car-- : rying about three hundred pound.. "When the natives start out on a long journey they always provide themselves with chicle, in order to allay tho pangs of thirst, for by chewing the gum the mouth and throat are kept moist and the desire for waterdiminished. Any mnn can do a casual act of gooo nature, but a continuation of them show it is a part of their temperament. We think our civilization is near its meridian, but we are yet only at h g and the morning star. Chewing-gu-

pack-mule-

k

Call.

Chewing Gum.

j

c:v-il- y

consu

'Kuiminjr" for tli Presidency. ''Young America" wanrs to know why we speak of u candidate running" lor the presidency. The term h.is its ft :gh, my son, in a famous Indian am.;sc:n.-icalled "running the gauntlet." in Ih a exciting national game tho citim-- : ranged themselves iu two lines. lacing each other, each voter and his wif being armed with clubs, stoucs, hickory "gads," black-snak- e whips aud ono thing and another." Down between these lines the candidate started on the liveliest run his eager legs could do. and the citizens with great enthusiasm kept him up to his work by letting him have it whenever they could reach him as he sailed. Every time he recieved an unusually vicious thump, that raised a welt like a stuffed snuke or laid the hide open to the bone, or erected a Prussian blue lump as big as a hen's egg. the entire convention howled with delight, and the delegates earnestly besought each other to give him another one just like it in the same place. If the candidate got to the end of the course alive, everybody treated him with the greatest consideration, shook hands with him and asked him to have something with them, at the same time expressing not only their forgiving wi.Ungness. but their most magnanimous anxiety to have anything with him, and the man who had hit him the awf idlest lick right across the misery, with a mahogany club, trimmed with spikes, came fight up and assured him that in all their differences of opinion during the cause he had ever maintained the profoundest respect and unselfish affection for the candidate per- sonally, and was now willing to accept the collectorsbip of Gnu .Tahik or the (mission at Senzhames to prove it. " But you don see any similarity or connection between that sort f thing and running for President?" 'Youug man, get thee to a kinder garten. You have deceived me. You Baid in your letter that you were eleven years old. I 6ee you are only three and a half . Go: to a kindergarten, go."

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Palpitation of the Heart.

Grindelia Jaborandi Eucalyptus Digitalis..".

909

13-3-

cock-crowin-

Buttwmflk haw taken the rjlaee of oquors in Iowa since the prohibitory aw into er'Vft. n,l it. :, roving vrTV

incredible. Gregorie's strength, rather than a source ol pride to him, was the cause of anxiety. Although the mildest of men, he lived in dread that he should be provoked to use his strength He was afraid against a fellow-beinto nurse his own child lest he should give it a fatal squeeze. Nearly all individuals of uncommon strength make up 5n bulk what they are deficient in height. Stanley, the African explorer, describes a strong man who was six feet five inches, and rather disproportionately slender. lie could toss an ordinary man ten feet in the air, and catch him in his decent. He would take one of the large whits Muscat donkeys by the cars, and, with a sudden movement of his right foot, lay the surprised ass on his back. He could carry a bullock half way around his master's plantation. Once he actually bore twelve men on his back, shoulders and chest a distance of 300 feet. Middle-aged people who remember the dawn of interest in muscular exercises recall Dr. Winship, the originator of the idea which was subsequently embodied in lifting machines. The astonishment that the doctor's performances created was equal to that of the Berliners a few years ago at Jorgnery's feats. The most wonderful of these was known as the trapeze feat. The Frenchmi. hung suspended by his legs from 1T swinging bar, and by sheer muscular strength lifted a heavy horse and its rider off the stage, suspending them several minutes, and then letting them down gradually and evenly as he raised Merwin Thompson's achievethem. ment at Rochester, N. Y., last year was, however, in the opinion of competent judges, more surprising than this. Thompson laid face downward on a firmly fixed ladder and resisted the efforts of a team of powerful horses to pull him from that position. A newspaper writer, in reviewing this wonderful performance, remarks that the little mention with which it escaped could happen only in a nation where strong men were three-year-ol- d

common. The same feat in 1675 gave William Joy the name of the English Samson. The medical faculty of "Vienna thought the strength of Joseph Pospischilli worthy of discussion at several special

meetings. This man held a table suspended by his teeth while three gypsies danced upon it. He and one of his brothers bore upon their shoulders a sort of wooden bridge while a horse drawing a cart full of stones was driven over it. Pospischilli's strength was thought to reside in his back, and his bones were said to be twice as large as the usual size. Fishing parties and explorers in the wilds of northern Wisconsin were a few years ago familiar with Peter Panquette, the Samson of the region. He was a famous woodsman, possessed of mighty endurance, and muscles that were like iron. Senator Clark says: "I have had him bare his arm to me and crack hickory nuts upon the muscles. It was like cracking them on a stone. He could take a handful of dried hard hickory nuts and crush them to pieces by merely tightening his fist." On one occasion. while serving as a guide for a party of ex Dlorers. a voke of oxen drawing the "boar. down the Fox gave out through fatigue. Panquette took their place, and hauled tho boat along, heeding the strain less than the beasts. Sheppard, the wonder of the Coventry volunteers, whose muscular development answers to the description given of Panquette, like the latter, wore his hair long. With the d it was a custom derived from his copper-colore- d ancestors, but with the ruddy Englishman it was in obedience to his belief that all his strength lay in his flowing yellow locks. Sheppard could lift a heavy man in each hand, and hold mem at arms' length. He could toss enormous tables, barrels and bags of flour about as though they were filled with feathe' s. He could take a pewter pint pot and tear it into pieces with his teeth, and he could munch large oyster shells as a person would munch a biscuit. Sheppard was the wonder of the country around, but his prosperous popularity developed enemies, and one of these, it is related, induced the strong man to drink deeply, and while sunk in stupor cut off his luxuriant hair. Sheppard awoke, felt his bare poll, and in tones of horror announced his strength was gone. Whether because such was the case, or because he wished to excite superstitious credulity, the strong man from that moment was weak, timid and hesita ing until his hair grew long again. half-bree-

lnter-Ocea-

n.

Smugglers' Tricks. The curious tricks to which people resort who deal in contraband goods, shows a zeal and ingenuity worthy of a better cause. One dealer in costlv lace used to run in a valuable lot through the gates of Paris, under the very feet and eyes of the officials, on the back of a little dog, who had another coat neatly fitted all over his back, which he wTore with as much grace as bis own hairy jacket. The lace was wound smoothly and evenly about his body, and he could carry thousands of dollars' worth in that way, and nobody be the wiser. He was a sharp little fellow, and when baffled at one gate would run off to another, slipping in under the very hoofs of the horses as a carriage rolled along. The trick was at last suspected, and the wary dog, rather than suffer himselr to be caught, took to tie water, and was shot. He had a costly winding sheet of lace about him when he came to be examined. Such a faithful dog ought to have had a better master. There is a museum of these confiscated articles at Paris, which is now and then visited by the curiosity hunter, where is a pile a coals, with a spool of sewing

rieart Pains. Palpitation. Dropsical Swelling. Dizziness Indipestion. Headache, Sleeplessness cured by "Wells' Health Renewer."

"I Have Sabered

lt

Beware of the incipient stages of Consumption. Take Piso's Cure in time.

"

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LTDU E. rnCKBAS'S

I rltc this as a Token of the groat appreciation

Verretalile ConpiH is a r::invs czzz

WML

!

With every dissaso imaginable for the three years. Cur Druggist, T. J. Anderson, rcororoanding to me, Hop Bittei-sI used two bottles! Am entirely cured, an-- heartily 'recommend Hop Bittws to every one. J. D. rVaiker, Buckner, Mo.

your Hop

I hare

of

Ditters. I was a!!Iotcd With inflammatory rlicunjatism f ! ! For nearly Seven years, awl no mdicinft semed to do m auy

For Female Complaints and no mmmnn tn onr best female nnnnlntinn.

iWenJmesseit

It Trill Cure enMrplv thn wftrst fnrm ,f Fomolo rv.iv.- plaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Trituration, Fallinsf and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and ia iarticularlT adapted to the Change

Good

!

!

.'

Until I tried two bottles of your Hop Bity ters, and to my surprise I am as well of Life. as over I rvas. I hoje disslve and expel tumors from the uterus in an o.1! wilJ ''You may have tNundant success" eany stago of development. The tendency to cancccoui Humors taero ia checked very speedily by its use. "In this great and' Valuable medi-im- -: It removes faintnes.", flatulency, destroys all craving tot stimulants, and relieves weakness of tho stnmach, Anyono! wishing to know more Bloatinor, Headaches, Nervous IToKtration. it curesDebility, about my cure? Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigesgeneral ros-tion. That feeling of bearing down, causinirpain, weight add by Can learn i riff me, F. M. CUd hafltflfha iu ,.!,.,.. ,.mann...lw Williams, 1:0 lkh sUot, Washington. It will at all times arid under all circumstances act in harmony with D. C. tho laws that govern the Female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex, this Compoundis unsurpassed. Price gl.OO. Sir bottlesfor $0.00,
 * . - .7.

--

No family should be without LYDIA C PIXIdlAJTS

I consider vour

Remedy tho best rc.wdy in existence) thread in each chunk ; boots with French LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness and For Indigestion, kMni.-ywatches hid in the heels ; a coffin which torpidity of the liver. 85 cents a box at all druggists. Complaint is filled with cigars; a huge stuffed "And nervous debility. I have just" Returned a rent in who sides disclosed "From the south in a fruitless search for a precious assignment of valuable laces ; health, and find that your hitters are doinj a huge African hangs by his neck in a me more Good! vejy ghastly fashion, but a stroke of the Than anything else; cane shows him to be only a sounding tin. Mybrol hrMyronani A month ago I was extremely myself were both cured, He used to figure on the footboard of a "Emaciated! !" to nil appearance, of carriage, as an attendant, and drove in Aad scarcely able to .walk. Now 1 am Catarrh and and out many times through the gates of Gaining strength! and last JulyandAugu.st- lTp Flesh!" Paris. . But one time, in a jam, when to th'.H date, Dec. '::. And hardly a day passos but what T am everybody was scolding and'swearing and neither have had eny iRturn of these troubles trying to get on, an officer present harang-e- d I.ly's Cream Balm was complimented on my improved appearance, tho crowd of drivers and told them the medicine. used. and it is all due to Hop to take an example of equanimity Bitters! J. Wicklill'e Jackson, GabhielFebdui. Spen from this black, who had looked on so Wilmington, Dal. cer, Tioga Co., N. Y. serenely amidst the tumult. Slapping t 'renin Balm is a None genuine without remedy founded on a cora bunch of t37 the good fellow approvingly on the shoul- HAY-FEV- ER rect diagnnhis of this s;reen Hops on the white la rl. Shun all the disease aud can be deder, he was surprised to hear him give a pendedup poisonous vile, "Hop1' with or "Hops" in stuff drujrists; tiucts.by ninil. Samplei their name. very metalic rattle. He was taken off to Lottie byin iil HI eta. LLYliKOB.drugiwtH.OiveKo. N. Y the inspection room, and found to be The reputation of filled with excellent brandy, which was Hostetier's Stomach Bitters as a prevendrawn off at the toe. They soon sampled I 1 CELEBRATED a HE SPY tive of epidemics, REi an "armful" of the fluid, and the poor , Htomactiic, an a general BY ALLAN PINKERTOM, black's day of service was over. ive. and a speciWho was Chief oi this U. S. Secret Serwc fic for fever ami aguii A somewhat similar game was played indigestion, bilious on English custom house officers, who arfectrjns, rheumadetism, nervous inspected a consignment to Dr. Swartz, bility, const itiiti:ual weakuebs, is Cbtabwhich proved to be four African heads lihed upon the preserved in brandy, and also some other sound basis of more than twenty ytars pickled "remains," all in "excellent presexperience, and can no more be shaken ty ervation." They "passed," and the the claptrap nosowners poured off the brandy from the trums of unscientitio pretenders, thim the their porcelain heads and bones, and everlasting liille by the winds that rustle drank to the health of the sharp officials through their defiles in the excellent liquor. For sale by all Drug"

iHay

Fever

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mnmv

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Whe a woman objects to being referred to as a "woman," and insists upon being called a "lady," it may be taken for granted that she has more vanity than brains, and more polish than

gist

generally,

Paynes' Automatic

Engines

and

Dealers

and

self-respe-

"I'll take his head, or bust?" exclaimed the photograper, who had a difficult subject to handle. The boat bnilder is apt to have all his ways thwarted. It's no secret nostrum. We speak of Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart-Weecomposed of best French Brandy, Smart-WeeJamaica Ginger and Camphor Water. It cures

Agents Wanted for our hew Book.

OFU

We offer an 84o Hi H. P. mounted Engine with Mill, golid isaw, 50 ft. rig omplet" Fngme on ski Is, jgtiO for operation, on errs. $ JO'1. less. Smd for circular (B). B. W. PAYNfc iV KON.S, Manufacturers of all styles Automatic from 2 to 3 H. P. : also Pulleys, Hangers and mating, r.imira, t . rox

i.

prudent buy way.

Ladies of all ages who suffer from loss of appetite, from imperfect digestion, low spirits and nervous debility, may have health renewed and life extended by the use of Mr3 Lydia E. Pinkham's remedies for all complaints specially incident to the female constitution. We not only have a living faith in Mrs. Pinkham, but we are assured that her remedies are at once most agreeable and efficacious. Possessed only in imagination, a guinea

,

becomes a

far-thin- g.

"Hello!" we heard one man say to another, the other day. "I didn't know you at first, why, you look ten years younger than you lid when I saw you last." I feel ten years younger," was the reply. "You know I used to be under the weather all the time and gave up expecting to be any better. The doctor said I had consumption. I was terribly weak, had night-sweatcough, no appetite, and 16st flesh. I saw Dr. Pierce s 'Golden Medical Discovery' advertised, and thought it would do no harm if it did no good. It has cured me. I am a new man because I am v well one " De worl' doan' owe owes it ter hisse'f.

man erlibin.

restorer and dressing, petroleum takes front rank among the new remedies. "Uongh oa Rats." Clears ont rats,mice, roaches, flies, bedb jts. ants,sknnks,chipmTinks,gophers. 15c. D'g'sts

Beard, as a rule, will come to the sir face.

' No Physic, Sir, in Mine ! A good story comes from a boys' boarding-ichoin ''Jersey." The diet was monotonous md constipating, and the learned Principal e iecided to introduce some physic in the apple-sauc- e, and await the happy results. One bright lad, the smartest in school discovered the secret mine in his sauce, and pushing lack his Dlate. shouted to the Dedaerosme : "Ivo physic, sir, in mine, lly dad told me to use ieuittcn' but Dr. Pierce's 'Pleastait Purgative Pellets,' and they are doimr their duty like a

and purely charm!" They are vegetable. Honest tea is the best policy for a tea store. Rough on Corns." Ask for Wells' 'Rough on Corns. 'loo. Complete cure. Hard orsoftcorns, warts, bunions.

CUKES

WHERE

ALL

ELSE

FAILS.

HOPE J.

Tk.

NEWS mmm GOOD LADIES!

"SEiEAl"- -

TO

i

ofOretet inducements toever Ret CP fered. Now1! your f orders for our celertir- ted Teas and Cull'eeie.and sehre abeauti. ful Gold Band ot Mum Rose China Tea Sei. or Uandeoroa Decorated Gold Baod Moss Rose Dinner Set, or t.oid Band Moss Toilet iSet. f i t tull particulars aaareas

L,Ht." HAlli,

Stl'Kltl W arn, Freckles, Moth Moles, Patches, Eruptions, Scars, and all Dis- ngurements ana linpeneulions ot the Face, Hands andleet, and their treat-

Acit0d TUK

ment, by lr. John H. Woodbury, 37 N. Pearl St.,Albany,N.Y. Send lucfor book. PA V. tur a I .He BcnumrMjiu m inc Coleman RunineitB College, Newark, New Jersey. P.ition tor graduates. National patmnnge. Write for Circulars to H. COLEMAN AGO. Thos. P. Simpson, Washington, T A TTTTTTQ A O ' ). C. No pay Rfked for patent until.obtained. Write tor INVENTOR'S GUIDE. for the best and fastest ACJKT WAJiTEl) B oks and Bibles. Prices reduced: percent. Natioai. PtTB.Oo.. Philadelphia, Pa. Send stamp foronrNewBook of Putentu I. RlV'rJUiM Oc 'ent Lawyer, Washington,

AMI.KICAN TEA CO., GREAT 31 Vesey Naw SrM. and M

P. O. Box

GLA!;!E

&

I

LOGAN,!

Jotj

St..

WASTED

ACSEXTS

myes

for the

CLEVELAND & HENDRICKS,

In 1 Vol. by T. W. Knox In 1 Vol. by Hon. A. Bar.ncm. Authorized, Authentic. Impartial Complete, the Bnt and Cheapest. The leading Campaign books of 188. Outsell all others 10 to 1. 17810 thousand in press. Each vol.. 600 paies, 1.50. &O perrent. t Azents. Outfit Frre. Freighti paul. At;ent8 earn W to 25 a day. Now is ths time to make money fast. Rend for Extra Term, at once, to UAKTFOUO PtLIbllLNO CO.. Hartford. Conn- to Soldiers 4 Heirs. Send stamp for Circulars. COL- - L. BING-HAAtt'y. Washington, D. O- responsible parties desiring Matrimony--Al- l amusement or matrimony send lilc.for c .i.v 'A'l.iiilme Bells." P.O.Box i.?.29. Boston, Mass.

t. U. Pensions

Y.)Colleee.-i2- u a CLAVERACK(N. first class. Ah.nzo Flack, Prest. Tnr Men. Qnlck. anre. nfe. Book nT 4r) I V I l W TO Oivlaie Agency, 160 Fultou St., New York.

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and full in the U. 8. partierVirs and rnt tu anrntK ?ddr-:fe(i. W. CARLETON & C ., Publishers, ew Tliis advertisement will appear lut once r w it out.

Nicholson's Improved Artificial Ear Drums. Tb on'y sure, eiisy and unseen device ueJ to p'rmsnently jio lusu'mmunuflii oy fscienuic men ol Eorope uwiuk. and America. Write for free illustrate 1 LL. Nicholson, 7 Murray tit. .New York. tive book to

J?j i ly f y jjk

i Jr

bottles of One and Ely's Cream Balm entirely cured me of Have had no standing. years' of ten trace of it for two years. Axbebt A. Pebbt, Sinithboro, N. Y. Price 60 cents. was severely afflicted with Hat Feveb. Itwenty-fivyears. I tried e for Ely's Cream Balm ad ihe effect was marvelous. It is a perfect cure. Wm. T. Cake, Presbyterian pastor, Elizabeth, N. J. Price 50 cents. Hay-Feve- b.

Hay-Fev- er

Hay-Fev- er

"Bnchn-Pabia- ."

cure, all Kidney, Bladder Snick, complete Diseases, Scalding, Iritation, Stone,Gravel,Catarrh of bladder.$l.Drogts. The Secret of Life. ScovilTs Sarsaparilla, or Blood and Liver Syrup, is the remedy for the cure of scrofulous taint, rheumatism, white swelling, gout, goiter, consumption, bronchitis, nervous ability, malaria, and all diseases ar.sing from an impure condition or the bood. Certificates cai be frcs.'nted fr.un many leading physicians, ministers ;.j.i! hbad's of families throughout the lan-- iji Jorsin? ScoviUs Blood and Liver Svrup in the hivhest terms. We are constantly in of cert;ft;ates of cures from them- s re liable sources, and we recommend it as the remedy for above diseases. f

only Iron y medlcine that will not blacken VPURITY

I

Jt 2Y

,

I I

orlnjure the teeth. SURE APPETIZER.

clans and Vs'' V. tV Druggists k. X. commend It as nS e best Try lc- 1 4Cy BEST TONIC KNOWnM

1

Will cure quickly and completely Dyspepsia, "Weakness, yA Malaria, Impure Blood, Chills and Fever, fraw and Neuralgia.

I it

M INVAIiUABTjE FOR LADIES AND FOR ALL .PERSONS WHO LEAD A SEDENTARY

X'A

VvSREL lEVESlDiGESTIONxrCLTX

I

anti-biliou-s,

i

i

Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. use id time. oia oy aruggistA.

I

The medical properties of petroleum have long been known to the aborigines, and since Carboline has become so well known as a hair

b-.- t

meat Ihriilinjr war book ever nlliherl. by hundreds of Press an I Ak"j's' test ra n alo. A lart'o. handsome book;
 * ir8 M illustrations.

fy'Sold only by our Agent. Can not be found in hoik stores. Sells fnmerclimts, farmers, mechanics and ev rybodi. We w int one apent in every Urnd every Army Post eounty r"or in

Er man

"

cit

iou.

S3

or cramps in stomach, diarrhoea, dysentery or bloody-fluand breaks up colds, f evers and inflammatory attacks. The road to econemy is a

The "SPY" is now selling by the Tent ofThoutandtf No competition. Clear territory. Only book of its kind. The "SPY" reveals man; urcrtls nj' the war never beThrilling narratives of PlNKKRTON'a fore published. BPIEB, that tv;ayeti the actions of onr ijiijnntic armien; a graphic account of the conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln. Perilous experi n f b of our Federal .Spies in the Rebel Capital; tu ir turlor i hopes and heroic bravery fully recounted in these vivid sketcnes; it is the

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DYSPEPSIA,

remedy It strengthens the muscles, tones ana for diseases of2( invigorates andpPUBITYjCf Liver the the system. tS Kidneys.

It Is a sure

kv

CURES

LIFE.

A

Brown's Iron Bitters

com-

bines Iron with. p.ure vegetable tonics. It is compounded on thoroughly scientific and medicinal principles, and

cannot intoxicate. All other preparations of Iron cause headache, and produce constipatioTa. Brown's Iron Bitters is the

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Si! '

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Brown's Iron Bitters is the H Best Liver Regulator reE moves bile, clears the skin, digests food, CITRUS R Belching,thoHeartburn, Heat E in the Stomach, etc. Li

T OXIiY Iron medicine that is not injurious its use does not T

even blacken the teeth. It not only cures the worst cases of Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty appetite and good digestion.

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The genuine has above trade-marand crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by

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Brown Chemical Co.,

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Baltimore,

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Id.

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Positively enre Biliousness, and all LIVER BLOOD POISON, and Skin Diseasea (ONE PILL A DOSET. and Fop no equal. "I find them a valuable Cathartic and have Pill.-- Dr --In my practice I use no other. J. Dennison, U.D., DeWltt, Iowa." T

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